Press Releases

Cut your own Christmas tree at a Kentucky Proud farm near you

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Cutting your own Christmas tree brings to mind a Currier & Ives image of a 19th century family in a one-horse open sleigh towing a large pine through a snow-covered field. Kentuckians can experience the modern-day equivalent on farms throughout the Commonwealth.

“Christmas tree farms enable families to make holiday memories,” Agriculture Commissioner James Comer said. “They also help Kentucky farmers make a living. I encourage all Kentucky families to buy a fresh Kentucky Proud tree this holiday season.”

At Barker’s Christmas Tree Farm near Lexington, owner Dale Barker will let customers borrow a small sled or wagon to tow the tree back to your car, as well as a bow saw for cutting.

“The majority of the industry in Kentucky is ‘choose and cut,’” said Barker, president of the Kentucky Christmas Tree Association (KCTA). “It’s an agritourism thing. The kids enjoy going out in the field.”

To encourage their parents to return the next year, Barker’s takes photos of each family and posts them the following year for pick-up.

“They have to come back the next year to get their picture,” said Barker, who has about 600 photos from last year displayed in a small barn. “We’ve had people collect pictures for 10 years. You watch their kids grow up.”

The KCTA website lists 18 member farms across the state.

“We have people from Owensboro to northern Kentucky that raise trees,” Barker said. “Most people make wreaths and sell tree stands. A few do garland. Some people even get further into agritourism with hayrides.”

Barker said no figures are available on how many Christmas trees Kentucky produces. He sells 500-600 per year, priced from $32 to $100, but 100 of those are Fraser firs he imports annually from North Carolina. “Our general trees, scotch or white pines, are $32 any size,” Barker said.

Barker is concerned about the future of Kentucky’s Christmas tree farms due to the advancing age of KCTA members. “I’m 53 and may be the youngest one in our association,” Barker said. “There’s room for others. The market is out there.

“But it’s not something people jump into very often. It’s a long-term proposition because it takes seven years before your first trees are ready for harvest.”

Barker said last summer’s drought was “rough” on KCTA members.

“If you didn’t water small trees last summer, you lost them,” he said. “Normally, you lose 10 to 15 percent of your trees, not 80 to 90 percent. Established trees in good health made it.”